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Tuesday, May 02, 2017

Kentucky Derby Update: Tuesday, May 2, 2017

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (Tuesday, May 2, 2017) – Godolphin Racing’s Thunder Snow (IRE) exited quarantine Tuesday morning and made his first visit to the main track at Churchill Downs. Going out during the special training period reserved for Kentucky Derby and Oaks horses at 8:30, Thunder Snow jogged a mile and cantered a mile.

Also making their initial appearances on the track were Monday arrivals Irish War Cry, Gormley and Royal Mo for the Derby and Oaks hopefuls Mopotism and Paradise Woods.

Later Tuesday morning, 14 fillies were entered for Friday’s $1 million Longines Kentucky Oaks (Grade I) with Steven Sarkowsky and Pam and Marty Wygod’s Paradise Woods being made the 5-2 morning-line favorite.
Also, Juddmonte Farms’ Lockdown had a three-furlong blowout for trainer Bill Mott, covering the distance in :35 in company.

KENTUCKY DERBY NOTES
ALWAYS DREAMING/PATCH/TAPWRIT – “Much better. One hundred percent better. He didn’t fight me at all. He was a lot more relaxed.”
Exercise rider Nick Bush summed up Day 2 of the “draw reins” experiment succinctly following his mile and a sixteenth gallop with Always Dreaming at 5:50 Tuesday morning at Churchill Downs.
The Florida Derby (GI) winner, a colt who has been described as feeling so good of late he was “jumping out of his skin,” had an adjustment to his morning routine Monday when Bush took over as his pilot and the longer, stronger “draw reins” were added to his gear, giving the rider more leverage and the ability to force the horse to drop his head while galloping. The changes took some adapting to by the 3-year-old son of Bodemeister at first – he bucked and pulled against the new setup Monday -- but for the second go-round he was going smooth.
Trainer Todd Pletcher, who orchestrated the switches, watched the exercise Tuesday from the fourth floor of the Churchill grandstand and had a positive report on his return to Barn 40
“I thought he went great this morning,” Pletcher said. “I very much liked what I saw.”
Always Dreaming’s stellar race record in 2017 (three for three, including the Florida Derby), along with his series of extra sharp bullet workouts, had the colt down as the possible favorite on more than a few scorecards coming up to Derby 143. But his feeling-so-good-he’s-going-to-jump-over-the-moon morning M.O. the past week left his connections with concerns he might scatter his P.M. power with A.M. antics. The changes put in place by Pletcher appear to have allayed those fears and to have channeled his energy in a more positive fashion. It now appears likely that the rest of Derby Week will flow in a much calmer fashion for the precocious Kentucky-bred and his backers.
The trainer’s other two Derby hopefuls went about their business in near ho-hum fashion, covering a mile and a half in good gallops during the 8:30-8:45 a.m. special training period for Derby and Oaks contenders. Patch had his usual exerciser rider Isabelle Bourez in the saddle, while Tapwrit had his regular guy, Silvio Pioli, on board.
Pletcher noted further that Always Dreaming would paddock this afternoon with horses for the day’s sixth race. He also said that the other two colts would do afternoon paddock duty Wednesday.

FAST AND ACCURATE – Kendall Hansen, Skychai Racing, Sand Dollar Stable and Bode Miller’s Fast and Accurate jogged two miles at 6 a.m. under exercise rider Joel Cano Tuesday morning at Trackside Louisville.
Trainer Mike Maker confirmed that the Spiral (GIII)-winning son of Hansen will make the 15-minute ship to Churchill Downs on Tuesday afternoon. He goes into Barn 27.
Channing Hill, who was aboard for his graduation this winter at Turfway Park, rides in what will be his first Kentucky Derby (GI).

GIRVIN – Brad Grady’s Louisiana Derby (GII) winner Girvin went out at 6 a.m. at Keeneland and galloped a mile for trainer Joe Sharp.
The dark bay son of Tale of Ekati also won the Risen Star (GII) on Feb. 25 among his three victories from four starts. His lone loss was a turf try at second asking three weeks prior in the Keith Gee Memorial at Fair Grounds. In his debut, he outfought highly regarded multiple allowance winner Excitations, who is expected to run in the $250,000 Pat Day Mile (GIII).
“He went out first set and had a great gallop,” Sharp said. “He cooled out great. We are going to KESMARC (Kentucky Equine Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation Center) to the hyperbaric chamber and then heading to Churchill (Downs). We’ll probably get there around 5 or 6 o’clock.”
Sharp, a 32-year-old West Virginia native, will have his first Kentucky Derby starter with Girvin.

GORMLEY/ROYAL MO – Trainer John Shirreffs’ pair of Gormely and Royal Mo got their first feel for the Churchill Downs strip Tuesday morning after being flown in from Southern California Monday.
Shirreffs, aboard a borrowed pony named “Bucky,” led Royal Mo to the racetrack at approximately 7:40. They stood near the outer rail inside the six-furlong gap for several minutes before exercise rider Cisco Alvarado slowly jogged off on his own and then circumnavigated the big oval twice in an easy gallop.
“He handled it fine; no problems,” Alvarado reported afterward back at Barn 42.
Royal Mo sits 21st on the list of Kentucky Derby runners with only 20 allowed to enter the gate this coming Saturday. Should something happen to or with any of the current 20 “in” horses between now and Friday morning’s 9 a.m. Derby scratch time, Royal Mo will be “the next man up.”
Gormley, the Santa Anita Derby (GI) winner, went to the track at 8:30 during the special Derby/Oaks training period. Again, Shirreffs on his pony led his charge onto the track through the six-furlong gap, then let them go about their business on their own. Gormley and Alvarado did two tours of the track and the rider opined all was good afterward, saying “he likes this track.” Shirreffs was of a like mind: “It went very well,” he added.
Unlike his barnmate, Gormley is a go for Derby 143 and he’ll have the saddle services of the just-voted-in Hall of Famer Victor Espinoza, who already has won the Run for the Roses three times. Espinoza was on hand Tuesday morning at the barn, having flown in on the private jet of the horses’ owner Jerry Moss, the music titan who laughed and shook hands as he joined in on the morning activities.
Moss, of course, had teamed with Shirreffs at Churchill Downs back in 2005 to pull off a major surprise in Derby 131 when their 50-1 shot took his cues from rider Mike Smith and came rushing home to prove a half-length best in that year’s edition of the Run for the Roses.
Yet another taking in the scene at the barn Tuesday was the master of Spendthrift Farm, B. Wayne Hughes. The veteran breeder has a two-way rooting interest in Gormley come Derby time Saturday. First, he stands the horse’s sire, Malibu Moon, at his Kentucky farm. Secondly, he inked a deal a few weeks back to have Gormley stand a Spendthrift when his racing days are done.

GUNNEVERA – Peacock Racing Stables’ Gunnevera galloped 1 ½ miles under exercise rider Victor O’Farrel at Churchill Downs Tuesday morning.
Trainer Antonio Sano admits to getting excited about the Fountain of Youth (GII) winner and Florida Derby (GI) third-place finisher’s chances in Saturday’s Kentucky Derby.
“Every day, I get more excited. I get nervous. It’s my first time at Churchill Downs. I am proud my horse is in the Kentucky Derby. All of the horses in the Kentucky Derby can win,” Sano said. “I hope he can win the Kentucky Derby. It would be a big gift for the people of Venezuela at this moment. In Venezuela, people are killing people. People have no food. Very sad.”
Sano, who saddled more than 3,300 winners in Argentina, was kidnapped twice – the last time held for ransom for 36 days in 2009 – recently celebrated his 500th victory in the U.S. Having a chance to win the world’s most prestigious race on Saturday has been occupying all of his thoughts.
“Last night, it was impossible to sleep. I can’t sleep. I kept thinking about the Kentucky Derby, the race, the post positions,” Sano said. “Every day, I stop to think, ‘My horse can win the Kentucky Derby.’ ”
Sano plans to paddock school Gunnevera Wednesday morning.

HENCE/LOOKIN AT LEE/UNTRAPPED – Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen had his trio of Kentucky Derby hopefuls walk the shedrow Tuesday morning, one day after completing their preparations with half-mile breezes. The trainer reports they all came out of their exercises in “good shape.”
Lookin At Lee and Untrapped had nearly identical works, completing their moves in :50.20 and :50.40, respectively, while Hence was the fastest of the three, going the distance in :48.40.
“Hence is fast,” Asmussen said. “We just get along with him. (Exercise rider) Angel (Garcia) has done a tremendous job with him. Angel just has so much experience with us in similar situations with horses like Untapable and Gun Runner. Especially Untapable. She was a lot like Hence. Lots of ability, but you have to manage it well.”
Lookin At Lee is the most experienced of the three having already danced many of the big dances starting last year when he finished second in the Breeders’ Futurity (GI) and fourth in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (GI) behind likely Kentucky Derby morning-line favorite Classic Empire. He was most recently third behind that same rival in the Arkansas Derby (GI).
“We need the distance to make the difference for ‘Lee,’ ” Asmussen said. “Looking at the field there are some extremely talented horses in there. I feel that he is one of the few that is tested under circumstances. You know how he is going to react in most situations and that gives you a lot of confidence. I don’t think the circumstances of the day, the field size, are going to surprise him or throw him off his game. That said, he has to run the race of his life to do it.”
Untrapped will be looking to rebound from a sixth-place finish in the Arkansas Derby after finishing second in two prep races at Fair Grounds and third in the Rebel Stakes at Oaklawn.
“Untrapped is a beautifully training horse and he gives you confidence that he deserves another chance,” Asmussen said. “He may have gotten off track at Oaklawn, but we brought him here with an open mind. He’s trained as impressively as any of them.”

IRAP – The Blue Grass Stakes (GII) winner went trackside during the special Derby/Oaks training period Tuesday morning under regular exercise rider Tony Romero. The pair put in a mile and one-eighth gallop around the big oval and Romero gave it a thumbs up afterward.
Assistant trainer Leandro Mora oversaw the exercise and reported that both trainer Doug O’Neill and owner Paul Reddam were inbound for Louisville and would be at Barn 41 later in the day.
Irap will be ridden by Mario Gutierrrez Saturday.

IRISH WAR CRY – Isabelle de Tomaso’s Irish War Cry was introduced to the Churchill Downs racetrack Tuesday morning while galloping approximately a mile under exercise rider David Nava.
Trained by Graham Motion, the son of Curlin arrived at Churchill Downs late Monday afternoon following a van ride from Fair Hills Training Center in northeast Maryland.
“He was a little bit on the muscle today, being his first time out here,” Motion said. “He didn’t train (Monday morning) obviously, with traveling. He was a little sharp, but I think he’ll settle down as the week goes on.”
Motion saddled Animal Kingdom for a Derby victory in the 2011.
Irish War Cry will attempt to join Regret (1915) and Cavalcade (1934) as the only New Jersey-bred horses to win the Kentucky Derby.
Irish War Cry also will try to become the first Wood Memorial (GII) winner since Fusaichi Pegasus (2000) to capture the Kentucky Derby. Funny Cide, the 2003 Wood Memorial runner-up, was the most recent winner of the Kentucky Derby who had previously run in the Wood.
The Motion trainee rebounded from a disappointing off-the-board finish in the Fountain of Youth (GII) at Gulfstream Park to capture the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct by 3 ½ lengths.
“We’re here to defend the Wood,” Motion quipped. “It lost its Grade I status last year. I’ve run in it twice and actually won it twice. I also won it with Toby’s Corner, who would have done very well in the Derby and it just so happened that Animal Kingdom won it that year. How lucky am I to be in that position?
“I think it’s a little like the Triple Crown. Everyone said it wasn’t going to happen. One day the horse that won the Wood will win the Derby.”
Irish War Cry is scheduled to gallop and school in the paddock Wednesday morning.

McCRAKEN – Whitham Thoroughbreds’ McCraken had a regularly scheduled walk day Tuesday at trainer Ian Wilkes’ barn. The two-time graded stakes winner was scheduled to school in the paddock Tuesday afternoon with horses in the fifth race.
McCraken will represent the first Derby starter for Wilkes and for jockey Brian Hernandez Jr., his second Derby mount. But the Wilkes-Hernandez team has struck big-time gold before.
In 2012, Hernandez celebrated his 27th birthday in grand style by riding the Wilkes-trained and Whitham-owned Fort Larned to victory in the Breeders’ Cup Classic (GI) at Santa Anita.
“I was talking with Clay (Whitham, son of Janis Whitham) and how everything is so magnified at the Derby,” Hernandez said. “With Fort Larned, we had a lot of confidence going into the race and the feeling is the same with McCraken.”
Hernandez had picked up the mount on Fort Larned midway through the colt’s 4-year-old season. He has been with McCraken all along, beginning with the colt’s debut at Churchill Downs on Oct. 2.
“That is what makes this more special to be a part of it since Day One,” Hernandez said. “After I won on him the first time, I was coming back through the tunnel and (jockey) Robby Albarado said I had better stay close to him because we was going to be a good one.”

PRACTICAL JOKE – Klaravich Stables and William H. Lawrence’s Practical Joke galloped about 1 ½ times around the Churchill Downs oval under exercise rider Fernando Rivera during the Kentucky Oaks and Derby training session.
“He galloped well and he stood in the gate,” trainer Chad Brown said.
After working in small-cup blinkers since finishing second in the Blue Grass Stakes (GII) last time out, Brown has decided not to use them in the Derby.
“I’m not going to put him in blinkers for the race,” Brown said. “He breezed fine in them and accepted them well. I got him used to them in case I wanted to do it and I gave myself the option by training him in them, if I wanted to make that change on entry day tomorrow. But the more I thought about it I’m just going to leave it alone. I think the horse is doing well as is and he won’t race in them.”

SONNETEER – Calumet Farm’s Sonneteer returned to the track to jog Tuesday, one day after firing a bullet half-mile in :47.20 over a “good” track Monday under jockey Corey Lanerie.
Assistant trainer Julie Clark reported he was doing “great.” Trainer Keith Desormeaux is scheduled to arrive Wednesday.

THUNDER SNOW – Godolphin Racing’s homebred UAE Derby (Group II) winner Thunder Snow made his first appearance on the Churchill Downs main track Tuesday morning since clearing quarantine, jogging once around before cantering a mile under Godolphin exercise rider Daragh O’Donohoe.
“We wanted to make sure he had a nice jog before we cantered him off and it was a good idea because he’s never had people so close around him,” O’Donohoe said. “That was the first time he’d been with a pony, as well; it was a good lesson.
“It was really nice to get him out because he was getting pretty fresh in that barn. He’s got a very high recovery rate so there’s not a lot that fazes him. He was pretty professional out there on the track and I was actually pretty surprised because we’re used to our own private gallops at Al Quoz in Dubai. We don’t see a lot of traffic so his behavior this morning was exceptional. He floated over the track and I had no problems on him. He moved well, he’s breathing well. He changed leads a couple times on the bend. I was really happy.
“It was just a normal, steady canter. I was just so happy he was changing his leads at the most important parts.”
O’Donohoe, who retired from race-riding in 2015, was named aboard Aljabr for Godolphin in the 1999 Kentucky Derby but the horse was scratched the day before the race.
“He went lame on me,” O’Donohoe said. “It was an emotional day because I gave him a really good shot. He was training really well and later he won three Group Is so it could have been a special ride to have. But that’s life for a jockey.”

ABEL TASMAN – China Horse Club and Clearsky Farms’ Santa Anita Oaks (GI) runner-up Abel Tasman galloped under regular exercise rider Dana Barnes while outfitted with blinkers as Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert looked on.
“She was a little bit lost out there yesterday,” Baffert said. “She likes to look around a lot. I think the blinkers are going to make a big difference. When I first got her Simon (Callaghan, her previous trainer) told me she’d been sick so I went real easy with her for a week. And then she got away bad in that race, but she wasn’t going to beat Paradise Woods.
“Then I put the blinkers on her and she came back and worked really well. She looks great here and she’s healthy but there are some really tough fillies in there. She’s going to need some racing luck and she needs to break; she can’t walk away from there like she did last time.”
Abel Tasman finished nearly 12 lengths behind Paradise Woods in the Santa Anita Oaks.
“Paradise Woods is an extremely talented filly,” Baffert said. “She’s the horse to beat. I watched her school the other day at Santa Anita and, wow, she’s imposing. She’s really, really special.”
Abel Tasman, the 5-1 co-third choice on the morning line, drew post 13.
“All I know about 13 is that I was born on January 13,” Baffert said. “I guess it’s all right. It’s too late to worry about it now.”

EVER SO CLEVER – Clearview Stable's Fantasy Stakes winner Ever So Clever returned to the track Tuesday and galloped once around under Angel Garcia. She had walked Monday after completing her Oaks preparations Sunday with a half-mile breeze that trainer Steve Asmussen called “spot on.” She was scheduled to school in the paddock during Tuesday’s fourth race.
Ever So Clever, listed at 20-1 on the morning line, drew post position one and will have Luis Contreras aboard Friday.
“The post wouldn’t have been our first choice,” Asmussen said.

FARRELL – Coffeepot Stables’ Wayne Catalano-trained Farrell left Barn 30 at 8:25 a.m. and was the first horse on the track for the special training session. Escorted by Sara Tittle on a pony and with exercise rider Antonio Ramos up, the three-time GII winner walked the paddock and schooled in the gate before galloping a “long mile and a half,” according to assistant conditioner Fernando Canteria. She is expected to school in the paddock during Tuesday’s second race.
In the post position draw, the daughter of Malibu Moon drew favorably in the seven hole, one of the posts for which jockey Channing Hill hoped. She was assigned 5-1 third-choice morning-line odds.
“I do like the seven,” Catalano said. “When I school her, I have been putting her in the seven, so it came out how we’ve been putting her in there.
“I'd like to know if I could get the 5-1, if I could bet now,” he joked before transitioning back to a more serious tone. “You can’t get her coming in better. We have a little more experience. She’s proven she likes the racetrack, so if that means anything, we might have an advantage. My filly can probably do whatever she wants and she proved that in her last race. She has speed. We’ll watch what (Paradise Woods) does and let them break and see what happens.”
A three-time Breeders’ Cup winner overall, Catalano won two of those at Churchill Downs — Dreaming of Anna in the Juvenile Fillies (GI) in 2006 and Stephanie’s Kitten in the Juvenile Fillies Turf (GII) in 2011. He last raced in the Kentucky Oaks in 2014 with Aurelia’s Belle, whom Hill piloted to a ninth-place finish of 14.
“These are the kinds of races we go to work for every day, seven days a week at 4:30 in the morning,” he said. “You want to get to these kinds of races. The rest of the races are just kind of going through the motions waiting to get to these. We’re always happy to be here.”
Farrell has four graded stakes victories around two turns, but has yet to win at the nine-furlong distance of the Kentucky Oaks. Catalano is not worried about an increase in trip.
“She’s had a few under her belt, so I don’t think it’s going to be a problem,” he said.

JORDAN’S HENNY – Erv Woolsey and Ralph Kinder’s Jordan’s Henny galloped a little more than a mile and a half under exercise rider Edgar Cano after the morning renovation break.
Trained by Mike Tomlinson, Jordan’s Henny drew post position five and is listed at 30-1 on the morning line.
“Post position doesn’t matter,” Tomlinson said. “She has tactical speed and you can put her were you want. Plus, in my opinion, I have the most underrated jockey in the country in Joe Rocco.”

LOCKDOWN – The Juddmonte Farms homebred Lockdown posted the only official work during the Oaks and Kentucky Derby training session, a three-furlong “blowout” from the three-eighths marker to the finish line in :35 under exercise rider Jo Lawson. The move came in company with Naples Princess, a 3-year-old filly who broke her maiden here last fall and is coming up on her 2017 debut. Churchill clockers recorded splits of :11.40 and :23 for Lockdown, as well as a half-mile gallop out into the clubhouse turn in :48.60.
“The hope was that she would go well and come back good so everything’s good so far,” Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott said. “She went along nicely.”

MISS SKY WARRIOR – Arlene’s Sun Star Stable’s Kelly Breen-trained Miss Sky Warrior left Barn 43 at 8:30 a.m., escorted by her conditioner on a pony and proceeded to gallop one mile on the main track at Churchill Downs with exercise rider Aurelio Gomez in the saddle.
“Everything was perfect,” Breen said. “She deserves to be in the race and I feel really good about her.”
Entering the Kentucky Oaks off five consecutive victories, including four graded stakes and a 13-length romp last out in the Gazelle (GII) at Aqueduct, the daughter of First Samurai is expected to be forwardly placed.
Drawing well, she will break from post 10 with regular jockey Paco Lopez in the saddle. She was assigned 9-2 morning-line odds, making her second choice behind Paradise Woods (5-2, post four).
“I don’t know if I could have drawn it up any better,” Breen said. “If they let me draw the pills and decide who went where, the 10-post is probably the best spot for us. We were the first one drawn and even if the other speed drew outside of us, we could have dictated it from the 10 (-post). It's a perfect position for us. Paco is a great gate rider with a good head on his shoulders. He’ll be able to see what we’re going to have to do.”

MOPOTISM – The Uncle Mo filly Mopotism, who races in the silks of California’s Paul Reddam, got her first feel for the racing surface at Churchill Downs Tuesday morning when she went trackside during the special Derby/Oaks training period under former rider Amir Cedeno. The double winner did a single tour of the strip and handled it well, said assistant trainer Leandro Mora, who oversaw the activity in the place of trainer Doug O’Neill, inbound from California.
Later in the morning, Mopotism drew post 3 for Friday’s 14-horse Oaks.
Mora saw some good in that. “We’re going to be closing Friday,” he said, “so the fact that she’s inside can have advantages. She’ll be saving ground right from the start and if we get enough speed to run at she could be tough.”

PARADISE WOODS – The Santa Anita Oaks (GI) winner Paradise Woods was introduced to the racetrack at Churchill Downs Tuesday morning, slipping through the six-furlong gap just after 7 o’clock with former rider-turned-exercise-rider-and-assistant-trainer-for-Richard Mandella Alex Bisono in the tack.
Mandella and his wife Randi looked on trackside as their precocious daughter of Union Rags went through a nice gallop of a mile, a move that had Bisono offering “she loved the track” a few minutes later Barn 42.
The trainer was happy with the exercise and holds high hopes for his charge, who only has three starts to her credit as she steps up to her demanding assignment Friday in the nine-furlong Kentucky Oaks (GI).
“We’re here to do the best we can,” he said. “I’ve been here and know the obstacles involved with a race like this. The crowd, the competition. And I haven’t had a lot of luck at Churchill.”
Mandella’s record in Churchill’s two biggest races – the Kentucky Derby and the Kentucky Oaks – do not lend themselves to bragging. He’s 0-for-6 in the Derby, with his best finish a fifth by Soul of the Matter in 1994. In the Oaks, he’s 0-for-3 with his best effort a second by multiple-champion Beholder, who – unfortunately -- threw a wing-ding in the post parade (unseating rider Garrett Gomez), then acted up in the gate prior to her second to Princess of Sylmar. Mandella has not come up totally empty at the Louisville track, however. He shows nine victories here over the years, including several notable stakes scores.
Still, he’d like nothing better than to put an Oaks on his ledger come Friday.
The Hall of Fame conditioner, who has a Hall of Fame wit about him, cracked wise following the post position draw Tuesday morning in which he was assigned post 4 and given the role of favorite at 5-2.
“I like it (the post),” Mandella stated. “It’s right there – between the three and the five.”
On a more serious note, he said he’d afternoon paddock Paradise Woods on both Wednesday and Thursday during the races.

SAILOR’S VALENTINE – Semaphore Racing LLC and Homewrecker Racing LLC’s Sailor’s Valentine left Barn 31 at 8:35 a.m. with exercise rider Kelly Wheeler aboard and trainer Eddie Kenneally on pony. The Ashland (GI) winner galloped a mile on the Churchill Downs main track and promptly returned to her barn.
“Everything went well today,” Kenneally said. “I was extremely happy with her gallop.”
The gray daughter of Mizzen Mast drew post eight in the 14-filly Kentucky Oaks (GI) field. She was assigned 30-1 morning-line odds and will be ridden by Corey Lanerie.
“It’s perfect for her,” Kenneally said. “I really like the post.”

SALTY/SUMMER LUCK – Gulfstream Park Oaks (GII) winner Salty will break from post position 14 in this Friday’s Kentucky Oaks for trainer Mark Casse.
“If we got that post in the Derby we’d be really happy,” Casse joked. “It could’ve been worse. I don’t think our filly has a lot of speed so the post could’ve been a little harder on some of the others.”
Salty galloped 1 ½ miles Tuesday morning under exercise rider Janelle Castonguay.
The lone horse on the also-eligible list for the Kentucky Oaks is Gary Barber’s Summer Luck for Casse.
“She’s been doing well in the morning,” Casse said. “We’ll see if she can sneak in.”
The daughter of Lookin At Lucky galloped 1 ½ miles Tuesday morning at 8:30 with Froylan Garcia aboard.
Salty will be ridden in the Oaks by Joel Rosario while Javier Castellano has the call on Summer Luck should she get in the field.

TEQUILITA – Dorothy Alexander Matz’s Tequilita was a bundle of energy Tuesday morning while galloping 1 3/8 miles under exercise rider Jo Robinson at Churchill Downs.
“She’s doing good. She was a little strong today, but she’s fresh. She’s fit. It’s cooler weather,” trainer Michael Matz said. “I guess it’s better than if she goes out there, going the other way.”
Tequilita, who captured the Forward Gal (GII) and finished second in the Gulfstream Park Oaks (GII), drew post position 11 at Tuesday’s draw for the Kentucky Oaks.
“I think it’s fine. The speed is on the inside, so it’s no problem,” said Matz, whose trainee is listed at 20-1.

VEXATIOUS – Calumet Farm’s Vexatious visited the starting gate and galloped one mile under exercise rider Freddy Quevero, according to Hall of Fame trainer Neil Drysdale, who then grazed her behind Barn 42 after training hours.
The full sister to multiple Grade 1 winner Creative Cause and last year’s Belmont Stakes runner-up Destin inspired Kentucky Oaks dreams from the time she hit the track.
“She’s always shown talent from the beginning, even when she was young,” Drysdale said. “The way she broke her maiden, everything went wrong and she still won, so we thought, ooh, this looks pretty good.”
Vexatious drew post six and was assigned 20-1 odds on the official morning line.
“I don’t dwell on that at all,” Drysdale said. “There’s nothing you can do about draws. It’s just good to be in the body of the race.”

WICKED LICK – Lee Mauberret’s Wicked Lick galloped a mile and a quarter and stood in the starting gate after the renovation break under exercise rider Leo Garcia.
Trained by Brendan Walsh, Wicked Lick drew post position nine for Friday’s Oaks and is 30-1 on the morning line. Brian Hernandez Jr. will have the mount.
“I’m happy enough with the draw,” Walsh said. “For once we are not too inside or too outside, so we are happy.”